Our website uses cookies to improve your user experience. If you continue browsing, we assume that you consent to our use of cookies. More information can be found in our Cookies Policy and Privacy Policy.

Why brands need to move to a direct to consumer model

Are you a brand struggling to build or evolve to a direct to consumer model? Are you trying, but failing? Are sales from the digital channel below expectation?

Or, are you a brand that has not yet made the move to a direct to consumer model, and still unsure if that is a move you should be making?

If you answered yes to any of these questions, this article is written for you.

What is the most common barrier to brands evolving to a direct to consumer model? Mindset at the top level. The lack of complete buy-in continues to be the primary hurdle.

Why the emphasis on ‘complete’? For brands, even though the transition from traditional models to a new direct to consumer model can and should be gradual the mindset cannot be ‘lukewarm’ to the notion of change.

Those brands that are lukewarm or put in a mild attempt are those who do it for the wrong reasons i.e. their competitors are doing it. The brand must be all in or all out.

It’s important to note, a brand who completely buys into a direct to consumer model is capable of servicing retailers and continue to manage these relationships throughout the change process.

The primary challenge within our organisation is that digital and the benefits of data are not being fully embraced by management as initiatives of value…Digital is failing to live up to it’s potential because it can’t be embraced without top down support.

Why do senior level decision makers struggle to see this evolution? What can be said to executive teams to initiate change? Why is this model shift important for the future success of brands?

To deal with these and other important questions, certain information should be presented and topical conversations should be had with senior level teams to stimulate the shift in mindset:

Conversation 1. Recalibrate the brand’s thinking of its model.

This initial discussion in challenging the identity of the brand is an important first step:

You are no longer a manufacturer.

You are no longer a wholesaler.

You are a vertical retailer, who has complete control of creative, supply chain, and wants to build direct connections to your target market.

You have valued retailer relationships, however, your primary objective moving forward is to preserve these relationships and grow consumer connections via direct means.

The purpose of this conversation is to look at the business with new lenses. By doing this everything looks different:

The competitive landscape looks completely different.

The retailers look different (they are both an ally and a threat, taking “your” customers) and suddently their treatment needs reviewing.

2. Deliver proof by showing trends of brand successes.

To attract and engage the consumer, consumer goods (CG) manufacturers are increasingly exploring ways to integrate new channels such as mobile and social media into their marketing mix.

Direct to consumer interaction is growing, as evidenced by the research, and it is critical in today’s highly-competitive global economy that consumer goods companies take advantage of every touch point with the consumer.

As the EIU report shows, this now involves a combination of physical and digital environments, including social media and mobile platforms.

In another survey, the Economist Intelligence Unit (in 2012) found, the percentage of manufacturers selling directly to consumers is expected to grow 71% over the next year to more than 40% of all manufacturers.

And the number of historically wholesale brands on the top Internet Retailer 500 is growing from 51 in 2008 to 63 in 2012.

3. Discuss the growing competition and challenge of grabbing the attention of retailers to support your brand and products.

Brands are now facing unprecedented competition. Consider in 1980, there were six brands of blue jeans in the U.S., today there are over 800 (not including brand knock offs).

Assortments are growing, intensifying the battle for shelf space. In 1968, Pringles had one flavour of chips. Today, it has 33.

With increased competition comes less shelf space for brands in retailer bricks and mortar locations. Less shelf space equates to an inadequate representation of the brand, the brand story, and the product range.

4. Discuss the shortcomings of retailers and the advantages brands have over them.

There is no secret around the digital conduct of retailers and their continuous struggles. This issue here is more with the retailer’s inability to support the brand as it is intended.

Websites around the world convert poorly (under 3.5% on average) because they attempt to acquire customers who are in late stage buying only.

Retailers need to engage with consumers in various stages of buying, and ideally those who are not even thinking of buying.

Enter content marketing strategy…

The most effective content creator is the brand, the creator of the brand story, and the product (s). A brand’s ability to effective tell stories creates stronger bonds both pre and post sale.

Brands hold all the power.

5. Present common issues with existing retailer/brand relationships.

Common barriers to growth come from the loyalty of retailers to a brand and how it’s dependent on three things:

Their margins.

How they can leverage your brand for their own purposes.

How much marketing support/money they can acquire.

Think about these retailer demands and what it does to a brand’s model and mindset long term:

In many cases it forces a brand to become operationally lean due to smaller margins.

Increased profit comes in the form of streamlining manufacturing (moving the factory to China).

Content development is around the training of retailer employees. Due to high employee churn this is a vicious and continuous cycle.

The brand has little time and resources dedicated to focusing on consumer needs.

6. Present the benefits of brands having direct consumer connections.

Brands driving direct to consumer relationships benefit from the following:

1. Strengthened brand image. This comes by telling the brand story as its intended direct to the target market.

2. Aggregate an incredibly rich source of consumer data (previously controlled by retailers) delivering insights into consumer needs, and buying behaviours. This direct contact allows a brand to develop a clear understanding of how their consumers buy and how to improve the delivery of one to one retailing experiences ie. personalisation.

It’s partly about talking to your target market, but it’s more about listening. Brands no longer need to listen to customer needs through the ‘retailer filter’. Success of a product was defined by retailer ‘sell-through rate‘. With direct social contact, a brand can determine why a product was successful or did not meet expectation.

4. The harnessing of data provides local knowledge for global brands. This allows for the penetration into new global markets.

5. Better experiences build brand advocates or fans. According to Seth Godin (in his book “Tribes”), fans deliver the following:

A fan will cross the street and avoid your competitors to buy from you.

A fan will bring a friend (or friends) to engage with you and buy from you.

A fan will reply to you if you ask them questions.

A fan will tell you when he/she is unhappy with the way you are conducting yourself.

A fan will pay extra for special or limited editions of your product (s).

A fan will not comparison-shop because they trust you.

And most importantly, fans connect with fans to amplify your brand, and your brand message.

Fan/peer behaviours form the foundation for social proof strategies. Some call social proof ‘the new marketing’, an important decision making influencer.

When not writing incisive commentary on big US brand’s social video strategy, giving new bloggers helpful advice on setting up a WordPress site or searching around the Topshop website wondering where my youth has gone, I’m also just staring blankly at the internet.

Occasionally during my comatose-like revery, something registers as vaguely interesting, and when it does I wipe the drool from my mouth and add the link to a little document on my desktop called ‘stuff that is good on the internet that I should tell people about’.

Here are the contents of that very document, spilled out on to your monitor like a fisherman who has cut open a net of bottom-feeding suction eels onto the deck of his trawler.

I didn’t agree with this, as I think those websites aren’t responsive because they don’t need to be.

Responsive design is a wonderful tool and is a great solution for quite a lot of sites. I have used responsive design to deliver many sites, but it’s not a magic bullet that will solve all pains around mobile.

GoPro is the fifth biggest brand on YouTube according to The Touchstorm Video Index and as only 2% of the top 5,000 YouTube channels are from brands, this is a considerable achievement.

With 1.7m subscribers to GoPro’s YouTube channel, how does this California-based digital camera manufacturer keep its audience entertained and engaged, on a social video platform notoriously difficult for brands to achieve success on?

If your answer is “because GoPro makes the kind of exhilarating, extreme sports videos that make you lose control of your bodily functions while sat at your desk” you’ll be half right.

Here I’ll be taking a look at GoPro’s YouTube strategy, using the best practice tips I laid out in my article from last year: YouTube strategy for brands.

According to a newly-published study published by Pew, nearly three-quarters of Facebook users polled said they didn’t know that Facebook generates and stores data about their interests and traits, and, when they came to learn this, over half indicated that they were uncomfortable with Facebook’s practice.

Mastercard, the third-largest credit card processor in the US, has announced a new policy that will make it more difficult for some businesses to automatically convert free trials into recurring subscriptions.